She said she never discussed her debt with family or friends. “You don’t want them to know,” she said. “Our parents hope for the best for us, and it’s hard to let them know we’re struggling. And with friends, you don’t want them to think less of you. And when you go out with friends you don’t want to say, ‘Oh, I can’t do that, I don’t have the money.’ ”Harnessing the power of the blog, telling the world what you can't tell your friends, changing your life, showing people a way to live... I approve!
Keeping the blog, she said, has made her conscious of her spending. Though most of her readers are strangers, she worries about letting them down.
“I know that if I use my credit card, I’ll have to go on there and say I used it. I’ll have to fess up. I’ve been wanting one of those L.C.D. TVs for quite a while now, but every time I see them, I think about having to come on the blog and say I bought it. Because we don’t need it, we have a TV, but it’s still a temptation that’s there. And I’m sure if I wasn’t blogging we’d already have it.”
१८ फेब्रुवारी, २००७
"Like other debt bloggers, Tricia believes the exposure gives her the discipline to reduce her debt."
Debt-blogging.
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Ann said:
"Harnessing the power of the blog, telling the world what you can't tell your friends, changing your life, showing people a way to live... I approve!"
Hell you invented it!
And FIRST!
Does blogging about spending $300 on scarves mean you are debt-blogging too?
I don't think it's a matter of "the poor woman's friends" being inconsiderate. I think she's embarrassed about being short on cash, and doesn't like to announce it.
Good for all of them for rectifying their problems and using their blogs to do it.
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